l8g8.] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. I23 



times and means best adapted to limit their diffusion, 1 pi., 69. — G o u 1 d, 

 H. P. Notes on spraying and on the San Jose - scale, Bulletin 144, Cor- 

 nell University Agric. Exper. Station, Ithaca, N. Y., Jan., '98. — H o ward, 

 L. O. The fig-eater, or green June-beetle {Allorhina nitida L.), figs.; 

 Further notes on the house-fly, 7, Bull. 10, n. s.; The San Jose" scale in 

 1896-1897 (map), 7, Bull. 12, n. s. ; Recent laws against injurious insects 

 in North America, together with the laws relative to foul brood, 7, Bull. 

 No. 13, new series. — Hunter, W. D. Destructive locusts in 1897, 7, 

 Bull. 10, n. s. — Kriiger, F. Further on the San Jose" [scale] question, 

 Gartenflora, Berlin, March 15, '98. — Marlatt, C. L. The peach twig- 

 borer (Anarsia lineatella Zell.), figs., 7, Bull. 10, n. s. — Matsumura, 

 M. Two Japanese insects injurious to fruit, figs., 7, Bull. 10, n. s. — 

 Quaintance, A. L. Some strawberry insects, figs.; Three injurious 

 insects: bean leaf-roller [Eudamus proteus L.], corn delphax [Delphax 

 maidis Ashm.], canna leaf-roller [Hydrocampa cannalis Fernald ms.],* 

 3 pis. Bulls. 42, 45, Florida Agric. Exper. Station, Deland, Fla., March, 

 '98. — Sm ith , J. B. The peach-borer {Sanriinoidea exitiosa Say). Ex- 

 periments with hydraulic cement, figs., Bulletin 128, New Jersey Agric. 

 Exper. Station, New Brunswick, N. J., Feb. 2, '98. — S ted man, J. M. 

 See Lepidoptera. — W achtl, F. A. Cephaleia lariciphtla n. sp., a new 

 enemy of the larch (Larix europcza DC), 38, 3, Mar. 31. — Weed, C. 

 M. Dept. of Entomology, figs., in Ninth Annual Report, Bulletin 48, 

 New Hampshire Agric. Exper. Station, Durham, N. H. Nov., '97. — 

 Zehnter, L. The sugar-cane borers of Java, figs., 7. Bull. 10, n. s. — 

 See many short notes by various writers, 7, Bull. 10, n. s. 



Arachnida. — D u e r d e n , j. E. Identification of the ticks of Jamaica, 

 70. — H o 1 1 a n d , W. J. Concerning ticks, 4. — W a s m a n n , E. Cap- 

 ture of ants by Theridium triste Hahn, Zoologischer Anzeiger, Leipsic, 

 Mar. 21, '98. 



Myriopoda.— Cook, O. F. A revision of tropical African Diplo- 

 poda of the family Strongylosomatidae, Proceedings, U. S. National Mu- 

 seum, No. 1137, Washington, '98. — Heymons, R. Communications 

 on the segmentation and structure of the Myriopoda, figs., 17, Oct. 21. 

 — K e n y o n , F. C. A peculiar glandular structure found in a Mexican 

 Diplopod, 68, Feb., 18. 



Orthoptera.— B 1 a t c h 1 e y , W. S. Two new Melanopli from Les 

 Cheneaux Islands, Michigan,* 5. — H e y m o ns , R. On the organization 

 and development of Bacillus rossii Fabr., figs., 17, Mar. 18. — v. Kima- 

 ko wicz, M. Abdominal fangs of the Forficulidae, Verhandlungen und 

 Mittheilungen des Siebenbiirgischen Vereins fur Naturwissenschaften zu 

 Hermannstadt, xlvi, 1897. — Scudder, S. H. The Alpine Orthoptera 

 of North America, 4 pis., Appalachia viii, 4, Boston, March, '98. — Wal- 

 ker , E. M. A new grasshopper from Ontario,* 4. 



Neuroptera.— C a 1 v e r t , P. P. Odonata (Dragonflies) from the 

 Indian Ocean, and from Kashmir, collected by Dr. W. L. Abbott, figs., 

 1.— C ockerell, T. D. A. Chrysopa punctinervis McL., 9.— C u r r i e, 



